Honey Fermented Garlic and Fresh Honey Garlic Mash

My two pantry apothecary essentials for winter are honey fermented garlic and elderberry syrup. Garlic is great for knocking bacterial infections on the head, you just have to put up with the garlic breath!

Stock up on fresh local garlic when you can. It will be readily available and reasonably priced at your farmers market when it is abundance. Garlic is also very easy to grow, you can cultivate a lot in a small plot in the garden or a large open pot.

Garlic deserves its massive reputation in traditional systems of medicine all over the world. It’s health effects are being backed by science as the evidence accumulates:

Liver Tonic – compounds in garlic are linked to protection of the structure and function of the liver.

Here are two easy ways to get some raw garlic into you:

Honey Fermented Garlic

Ingredients

Garlic Cloves, peeled

Local Raw Honey

This is one fizzy ferment so if you have a fermentation lock use it here, otherwise use a conventional jar, however, be prepared to burp it once or twice a day. Keep it on the kitchen sink, out of direct sunlight so that you remember.

Use a sterile jar, fill 1/2 – 2/3 full with raw garlic cloves.

Pour honey over the top so that the jar is 3/4 full, stir the cloves through the honey to make sure they are fully coated. If your honey is too crystallised to mix with the cloves stand the honey container in a bowl of warm water until it softens enough to use – don’t worry if it is thick, it will liquefy very quickly as the ferment ramps up.

Place the jar on a plate to catch any overflow, out of direct sunlight.

You will need to stir and burp your ferment twice a day until the active fermentation period lessens after which you can do this once a day. Stir the ferment with a clean stainless steel spoon and use another one to strip excess honey from the first spoon back into the jar.

After 3 – 4 weeks your cloves will be golden brown and the active fermentation period will be over. The jar can then be stored in the fridge or a cool dark place for up to a year (ours never lasts that long).

You can take the honey and the cloves to prevent and treat bacterial infections, especially those related to upper respiratory tract infections. Swish the honey up around the opening where your nose drains into the back of your mouth. This can work a treat when you have of sinus/nasal infections. Chewing on the cloves is also great for bacterial infection of your gums/mouth.

You can take up to 3 – 4 teaspoons of honey and 3 – 4 cloves a day when you have an acute infection. 1 – 2 cloves a day and a teaspoon of honey is also good general health tonic and preventative.

Caution

There are many medications that can interact with medicinal quantities of garlic. Check with your healthcare practitioner before taking larger doses. Children can have half these doses. However, infants under three should only be administered these preparations under the supervision of a health professional.

Don’t only think of this gorgeous ferment as medicinal, it can be added to all variety of foods. The honey portion can be drizzled over baked carrots and pumpkin, chicken and lamb. The cloves are great chopped into salad dressings, hummus and marinades

Honey Fermented Garlic

Honey garlic mash is fast and easy. You can take it to prevent and treat bacterial infections, especially those related to upper respiratory tract infections such as siunusitis.

Honey Garlic Mash

If you are not a super fermenter or a super organised person and do not have a ready stash of fermented garlic in your pantry, ever fear … garlic mash is here!!

Ingredients

6 cloves of raw garlic, peeled and finely grated/mashed

1/4 cup medicinal (jellybush, Manuka etc …) or raw local honey

Mix garlic with honey and store in a jar in your fridge until used up or for up to two weeks.

You can take the honey garlic mash to prevent and treat bacterial infections, especially those related to upper respiratory tract infections. Swish the honey up around where your nose drains into the back of your mouth. This can work well for sinus/nasal infections. you can also swish it around your mouth for bacterial infections of the gums or mouth.

You can take up to 3 – 4 teaspoons of honey when you have an acute infection. A teaspoon of honey is also good general health/immune/cardiovascular tonic and preventative.

Caution

There are many medications that can interact with medicinal quantities of garlic. Check with your healthcare practitioner before taking larger doses. Children can have half these doses and children under three should only be administered these preparations under the supervision of a health professional and under 6 months, not at all.

The fresh garlic in this preparation can be quite spicy so make sure you do not take it on an empty stomach. If you do find it burn a little you can take some cow or coconut milk to relieve the sensation.

Enjoy your Honey Fermented Garlic and Honey Garlic Mash!

Do you have any favourite tricks for getting more raw galric into your day?

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